Click photo to enlarge
John Melville has been hand-picked to help build the
halfpipe at the Winter Olympics in Vancouver in February.
He stands beside the Global Cutter he invented at Cardrona
Alpine Resort's half pipe. Photo by Matthew Haggart.
Wanaka man John Melville has been chosen to help build
the Winter Olympics halfpipe in Vancouver in February.
Melville's terrain park grooming skills - he invented and
patented his own custom-made halfpipe shaper called the
Global Cutter - has attracted plaudits from some of the
world's best snowboarding and freeskiing athletes.
Melville's halfpipe shaper is used to build and maintain
Cardrona Alpine Resort's 22ft (6.7m) Olympic standard
halfpipe.
Cardrona has played host to international snowboarding teams
since the official closing of the skifield, two weeks ago.
Some of the world's top snowboarders, including defending
Winter Olympic halfpipe gold medallist Shaun White, of the
United States, have travelled to Wanaka to take part in the
training camps.
With the Winter Olympics just five months away the camp has
also attracted Winter X-Games medallist Torah Bright and her
Australian team-mates, plus national teams and
representatives from New Zealand, Japan, Poland, Canada and
Spain, Cardrona spokeswoman Nadia Ellis said.
Much of the credit for attracting the international teams
down under had to go to Melville, Cardrona's park and pipe
manager, she said.
Melville could not be contacted for comment by the Otago
Daily Times this past week.
He has been hand-picked by FIS Winter Olympics officials to
join renowned pipe shaper Steve Petrie, from Arena Snowparks
in Vancouver, to build the 2010 Olympic halfpipe.
White, who won back-to-back halfpipe titles at the Burton
Open and FIS World Cup event at Cardrona in August, said he
was grateful for the chance to return and train at the
facility.
"It's awesome to be able to rely on a mountain to have great
terrain during the summer time when there's no snow in the
US," he said.
The international training camps continue at Cardrona, until
October 24, and will step up this week when the Japanese
national snowboarding team brings in a 900kg inflatable stunt
bag to place at the foot of the pipe to help with their
practice.